Say No to the Duke
The Wildes of Lindow Castle
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
Could she possibly refuse a duke’s hand—in favor of a sardonic, sinful rake?
Lady Betsy Wilde’s first season was triumphant by any measure, and a duke has proposed—but before marriage, she longs for one last adventure.
No gentleman would agree to her scandalous plan—but Lord Jeremy Roden is no gentleman. He offers a wager. If she wins a billiards game, he’ll provide the breeches.
If he wins…she is his, for one wild night.
But what happens when Jeremy realizes that one night will never be enough? In the most important battle of his life, he’ll have to convince Betsy to say no to the duke.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
James's fourth visit to the Wildes of Lindow Castle (after Born to be Wilde) struggles to incorporate mental illness, social stigma, and trauma into a fluffy Regency romance. Lady Boadicea "Betsy" Wilde's reputation is tainted through no fault of her own: she's believed to have inherited her mother's debauched and licentious nature. To compensate, Betsy transforms herself into a model of propriety. An engagement to the future Duke of Eversley should be the culmination of her efforts until her brother's best friend, Lord Jeremy Roden, interrupts her conquest. Jeremy, devastated by his wartime service, endured a stint in Bedlam that only made things worse. Little alleviates his depression until Betsy proposes a bet over a game of billiards: if she wins, Jeremy will escort her on a daring, disguised journey around London; if he wins, he gets one night in bed with her. Even after their tryst turns into love, the demons of the past make a happy future seem impossible. James creates blistering chemistry between her protagonists, but her light tone betrays the deeper, complex issues of trauma and shame that her characters are forced to face. By not integrating the romantic plot line and the journey of psychological recovery, this story falls short of its ambitions.
Customer Reviews
Great!
I was very excited about this one, I feel like a vast majority of the book was a re-write if the scene from the previous book. Would have loved more dialogue with Betsy and Jeremy regarding his war experience in the colonies, but all in all I enjoyed. Definitely some pretty bad typos though when Parth and Lavinia should have been referenced instead of Diana and North.
Terrible editing…
This book is one in a series. If you read the books in order, you know that an incident in the previous book is referenced in this book more than once, but repeatedly using using the wrong characters! Ugh!
Loved this book
One other reviewer said that there mistakes in replacing North and Diana’s Wedding for Parth and Lavina’s wedding but honestly I did not see that. I read purposefully to find the “error”. They story line up with the events in the previous book. It was North and Diana’s wedding. The events and meetings were close to
Simultaneous. Parth and Lavina’s story and Bess and Jeremy’s story are very close on the time line if memory serves. I have very much enjoyed this series.